Mocking Donald Trump has become a new national pastime for millions of Americans—but for some folks in Scotland, it’s been their hobby for nearly a decade. On Wednesday night, Full Frontal with Samantha Bee correspondent Amy Hoggart introduced viewers to the dedicated Scots who have been sparring with the tawny-headed POTUS, who is Scottish on his mother’s side, ever since he tried to build a golf course in Aberdeenshire.

The problems began when Trump first clashed with Michael Forbes—a local farmer who owned land next to the golf course, but refused to sell it. The farmer remembers Trump strolling up onto his land, flanked by half a dozen bodyguards: “The first thing he says is, ‘What’s this land worth, $25 an acre?’ I said, ‘In your fuckin’ dreams.’ ”

“I sussed him out in 10 seconds,” the defiant Forbes continued. “He was an asshole. The only regret I have is I didn’t drop him on his ass when I met him.”

This enraged the famously thin-skinned businessman, who then trashed Forbes in front of every camera he could find. He called Forbes’s land “disgusting,” later saying he “lives in a pig-like atmosphere.” He also tried getting the Scottish government to seize Forbes’s land—something the farmer laughs about to this day. Forbes’s mother also finds the whole thing hilarious: “She thinks he’s a clown.” The move emboldened Forbes’s neighbors as well, who joined forces with him to repel Trump. (For the full story, read Vanity Fair’sdetailed 2008 account of their conflict.)

In the Full Frontal segment, Hoggart also met with other Scots who have turned hating Trump into a national sport—like a local marine biologist who purchased a small part of Forbes’s land in order to help deflect some of the attention off the farmer, and Stan Blackley, a Scottish professor who managed to literally raise the hairs on Trump’s head with a statically charged balloon.

No trip to Scotland would be complete without a proper pub crawl, so Hoggart also hit the bars, asking local Scots how they felt about Trump. Most of them ran down a laundry list of insults, calling the president a bawbag and a walloper—among other colorful Scottish disses.